The Mercury News

GOP’s new Senate leader provides centrist approach

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. ©2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

A Republican moderate takes over as state Senate minority leader this week — a small, post-Trump step that could help rejuvenate the California GOP.

Sen. Scott Wilk, 61, of Santa Clarita, is a throwback Republican lawmaker, the type needed by the GOP if it’s ever going to move forward and regain legislativ­e relevancy.

He’s a self-described “practical conservati­ve” who strives toward bipartisan­ship and often coauthors bills with Democrats.

“I don’t poke them in the eye,” he said. “I try to be very civil. That’s very much lacking in today’s world.”

Wilk’s brand of conservati­sm makes him a moderate by contempora­ry standards. In Sacramento, Democrats are so dominant that they can enact anything they unite behind. Unfortunat­ely, without ballast on the right, the majority party often veers too far left.

What remains of the weakened Senate Republican Caucus realized the need for change. And that’s a good sign for the GOP and for two-party democracy.

But there’s a sad history for moderate Republican leaders in the state Capitol. Here’s the pattern: When they’ve moved too far to the center — voted for tax increases, fought climate change or not shown enough partisansh­ip — they’ve been dumped.

By contrast, Wilk’s predecesso­r was dumped partly because she’s too far on the right fringe.

Sen. Shannon Grove, 55, of Bakersfiel­d, probably would have been axed anyway, because she committed an unpardonab­le sin: Two Republican seats were lost in the November election, on her watch. When that happens, the leader is usually ousted.

Meanwhile, California Republican­s picked up one Assembly seat and four in the U.S. House.

Republican­s are down to nine state Senate seats. Democrats hold a supermajor­ity of 30. In addition, there’s one vacancy that’s sure to be filled by a Democrat.

The last time Senate Republican­s were close to this weak was in 1961, when there were only 10 of them. Long before that, in 1883, there were eight.

Assembly Republican­s aren’t much better off. There are only 19 of them, against 59 Democrats. There’s a vacancy and one independen­t — former GOP leader Chad Mayes of Yucca Valley, who was considered too moderate and dumped. Then he dumped the party.

The current Assembly GOP leader is Marie Waldron, of Escondido, who keeps a low profile.

By contrast, Grove’s profile was too high and too cringey for most Senate Republican­s. She once described herself as a “gun-carrying, tonguetalk­ing, spirit-filled believer.” She was a vigorous follower of former President Donald Trump, calling him “the greatest of all time.” Grove bought Trump’s lie that Democrats stole the election with voter fraud.

After being declared the winner by everyone except the booted president and his faithful, Joe Biden tweeted that Americans should “put away the harsh rhetoric.” Grove retweeted with a retort: “Oh, I don’t think so.”

The clincher for Senate Republican­s came Jan. 6, when a deadly, Trumpcraze­d mob stormed the U.S. Capitol. Grove posted a tweet falsely claiming that the rioters were led by the leftist movement known as antifa, not by Trump supporters. She quickly deleted it, but not before it popped eyes throughout the California political world.

Major business donors have practicall­y given up on the GOP in California and have been focusing on electing moderate Democrats to the Legislatur­e.

“Wilk is a good example of the type of big-tent Republican that the California GOP needs to win,” said Marty Wilson, executive vice president of the state Chamber of Commerce. “He’s a guy who knows how to win by talking about something other than Donald Trump.”

Wilk is a turn in the right direction for the GOP — leadership rerouting toward the center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States